![]() ![]() ![]() It is a powerful thesis, but Bayles obfuscates her arguments by forcing all types of music and art into such rigid categories as ``introverted modernism'' and ``extroverted modernism.'' She calls the tendency to shock, for example, ``perverse modernism'' and claims that this antiart, together with racial stereotypes, has kept African American music, which should be a humanizing antidote to the brutal and the obscene, out of the mainstream. ![]() Yet despite the vigor and balance of these musical origins, Martha Bayles. ![]() truer to civilized values'' than punk, heavy metal, rap and other antisocial impulses descended from the late-19th century European avant-garde trends in art that led to futurism, surrealism, dada and ultimately to music whose aim is to shock. Image for Hole in Our Soul: The Loss of Beauty and Meaning in American Popular. Hole in Our Soul, despite its tendency to rely overly much on the two straw men of critical theory and perverse modernism, is a thought-provoking book. Bayles, former TV and arts columnist for the Wall Street Journal, takes the title for her book from the old saying, ``If you don't like the blues, you've got a hole in your soul.'' The author of this wide-ranging study of American popular music maintains that the African American tradition-blues, jazz, gospel-is this country's ``distinctive musical idiom. ![]()
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